$14.00
This homeschool printable planner is simple, but I’ve created a ton of different pages for you to choose from. You won’t use every page, so don’t print the entire thing unless you want to. Some pages are meant to be printed each month or more. It’s all up to you. But there are some really great options in here that’ll help keep you organized. If they work for me, they can work for anyone.
Description
What’s Inside This Homeschool Planner
- A monthly overview with no dates – add your own as you go to start your school year when you want.
- A daily to-do page – print as many as you need. Some days you don’t want to do anything, and if you do, you may not want to write it down.
- A monthly goal page so you can lay out what you want to get accomplished in that month. My advice: go easy on yourself and keep it short.
- Reading log so you can write down the books your kids have read, or the books you want them to read.
- A weekly planner – for you and/or students. This is what I needed! There are no times, no subjects listed and nothing set in stone. Just days of the week and empty boxes that you fill out as needed. Take the time schedule away and you’ll immediately feel less stressed.
- Field trip Ideas – whether you do them or not, at least you’ll have a page full of great ideas.
- Password log sheet for all of the programs you sign yourself and your kids up for.
- A cleaning schedule and a sheet with a sample cleaning guide – I know, I know, don’t get me started. This one is probably the least printed sheets in this whole planner. But it’s here if you need it.
- Animal chore chart – not for your animals to dust, but for you and the kids to make sure the animals stay fed and clean.
- A student chore chart because no matter how old they are, they can help clean something.
- Farm chores – only valid if you live on a farm with chickens, cows, and a big yard to clean. Still printed out more than the cleaning chart.
- A blank chore chart so you can write down any chore you see fit to give the little ones, and not so little ones.
- A page for notes, random thoughts, and brainstorming. Or a place to write down the curse words you are thinking but can’t say out loud. Just keep this page to yourself.
- A monthly meal planner. This makes things easy. Let everyone come up with ideas of what they want to eat this month and pick a day. It’ll get filled pretty quickly and you can easily make your shopping lists from here.
- A weekly meal planner with space for more details and a grocery list. You know you need a list when you walk in the store or you’ll walk out with way too much junk.
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